As we move towards 2024 and our focus on massive corruption in the South African financial system things are getting heated in the boiler room of social media. I invited Johan Roodt to come and debate Reyno de Beer on some of his allegations but he has not responded but has, since, removed me from his daily email broadcast to a large number of people in South Africa. I had Johan Roodt on a live stream early last year and concur with many of his allegations about the corrupt banking system in South Africa.
Johan Roodt was invited to contact me before we went live - he chose not to.
While the ANC have been ducking and diving over the court ordered release of the release of minutes of meeting in which President Ramaphosa personally presided over the hand out of ANC Government tenderpreneur prizes/contracts to ANC cadres, like Edwin Sodi, more and more information about this illegitimate practice is now starting to trickle out.
There is growing consensus that man's achievements from the mid-1800s have been destroyed and captured by the ruling elite. Consider the pyramids, the Eiffel Tower, the grand cathedrals and other buildings that defy the limited capabilities man was supposed to have back then.
Attorney Riekie Erasmus and Dr Faan Oosthuizen talk about their journey and challenges when daring to present a differing view on the official view on the covid jab. Riekie is involved in the NPO Covid Care Alliance and World Council of Health. Faan and Riekie are in the Pretoria High Court challenging the covid jab roll out.
Last week, two big things happened in the Central Bank Digital Currency (“CBDC”) arena. Another G-7 economy, the UK, took a big step toward adopting a CBDC. At the same time, the first largish economy to have launched a CBDC, Nigeria, descends further into financial chaos.
One of the world’s oldest central banks, the Bank of England (“BoE”), and the British government jointly confirmed that a digital pound would probably be necessary at some point in the none-too-distant future. While they were saying that, lengthy queues were forming at ATMs across Nigeria, the first largish economy to launch a CBDC, as most Nigerians struggle to access physical money following the government’s disastrous demonetisation campaign.